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open hardware is very interesting, but very challenging. The entry costs to make anything are huge, so you need big backing before you can even start. I think an open graphics card is probably the most ambitious open hardware project that there has been (even more than an open phone).

However there are projects that make a good success, for example the arduino, and all the open addon boards. the beagleboard (though it has big backing from TI), rasberry pi, isostick, reprap etc.

With luck things will get easier and cheaper. ARM chips mean you can do a lot in small space for not too much money. I wonder if someone could put an ARM with a Mali GPU (or several) on a PCI-E card, and make a basic graphics card for ?100. It wont impress gamers, but it would be interesting for some.

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well that and it would have been a much more interesting project if they had the backing to build a full opensource HTPC mobo based around something like the OpenSPARC spec and what the http://www.pchdtv.com/ project was doing.

Also, what happened to the PCHDTV project? It looks like they're still selling the same PCI HD-5500 card they where like 6 years ago, these days most mobos come with only 1 PCI slot, if that, would hope they would make a PCIe 1x card to stay relevant.

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And yes, even some years ago people said that it was nearly impossible to get a real HW house up and running producing CPUs or GPUs since there is way too high leveled know how etc. involved that you can't just reach within a few months. Plus you need a lot of money to invest first and that takes time until you reach ROI.
Though that shouldn't mean there wouldn't be an option for simpler chips. Or design a board from ready components (OpenPhoenux and the like)

Anyway IMO any company should open specs to a degree that people can write a fully working driver for it. Yes.

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I don't fully understand Mr. Meeuwisse's objection. A respectable company was kind enough to contribute substantially to the OGP, but they requested that their contribution remain anonymous. I don't see anything wrong with that. We were very grateful for their help, and we could not have succeeded without it. But we did succeed, and the FOSS community is better off for it, with full design specs for a 100% purely open source graphics card development platform.

Making an anonymous contribution or code or designs to a FOSS project is no different from making an anonymous, no-strings monetary contribution. But Mr. Meeuwisse seems to disagree for some reason and took it upon himself to "expose" them.

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Those stubborn enough to do it without market leader support don't get enough support from others with good enough talent; there are only a limited number of people who can actually improve on the current state-of-the-art.

The greed? Well, some of those talented guys will probably be sucked up into the biig machinery. Ok, not greed. Reality.

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wen i read this "Why The Open-Source Graphics Card Failed" i imagine a article about Bridgmans Failure in manage the AMD opensource driver team...

Why the HDMI code release failed and why the reverse engineered HDMI support is only stereo sound.

Why the Powermanagment failed and why the SPEC is so incomplete that even in the lowest power profile the graphiccard burn more energy than with the catalyst driver.

and the APU performance scandal you only get 10% of the performance of the catalyst because the powermanagment for the APUs isn't to save energy its a dynamic Overclocking feature to hit the "maximum performance" no powermanagment means shit performance for the APUs.

and it is Bridgman's pure intentional to let the community do everything themselves because they don't write the open source drivers and they manage to release such a incomplete spec to make sure the opensource driver will LOSE the battle against catalyst.

It is AMD's desire to prove that open source is worse than closed source.

and in the end the UVD unit to make sure only the catalyst get a advantage in the stars microcontoller to transcode with shaders to eliminate overheat to the CPU. and no this feature has nothing to do with any DRM or copyprotection its just the fact that there isn't another microcontoler to handle this in the open-driver

it shows to me that they only do an opensource driver to prove it wrong like this "hey watch the closed source driver: better power managment and better performance and less power drain its GREEN to use closed source and so much more features you can't imagine how wonderfull closed source is "

amd its only how bad you are and not how bad opensource are. bridgman trash your blueray player and uninstall your windows vista!